two kinds of prostate cancer: the good kind and the bad kind – the john mchugh kind and the frank zappa kind-Provenge anyone?

why do i try to please people who could care less if i live or die….morrissey

“That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore”

Park the car at the side of the road you should know time’s tide will smother you and I will too when you laugh about people who feel so very lonely their only desire is to die well I’m afraid it doesn’t make me smile I wish I could laugh but that joke isn’t funny anymore it’s too close to home and it’s too near the bone it’s too close to home and it’s too near the bone more than you’ll ever know
It was dark as I drove the point home and on cold leather seats well, it suddenly struck me I just might die with a smile on my face after allI’ve seen this happen in other people’s lives and now it’s happening in mine

They won’t pay for a $65 PSA so does it surprise you they won’t pay for $93,000.00 Provenge? Duh…

250,000 men diagnosed a year in u.s. of prostate cancer- 25,000 die…provenge is for the ones that are dying…you do the numbers…usptf (or whatever the letters) most certainly has!

By Vinay Singh

Dendreon (DNDN) says it expects to cut 600 jobs as it continues to struggle with weak sales of its prostate-cancer therapy, Provenge.
The newest layoffs, amounting to over 40% of the company’s remaining workforce, follow the dismissal of 500 employees in September 2011. Dendreon also says it will close a manufacturing plant in Morris Plains, N.J. By restructuring, the company hopes to reduce its cost of goods to less than 50% of its revenue over the next 12 months.
Dendreon has been on a roller coaster ride since 2010 when its prostate cancer vaccine Provenge was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Provenge is considered the first in a new class of therapies meant to train an individual’s immune system to attack cancer cells as if they were viruses.
The company unexpectedly ran into major hurdles in attempting to launch Provenge, including its high price tag — which was reported to be $93,000 — doubts about its efficacy, and complex reimbursement issues that caused doctors to shy away from prescribing the treatment. And just as Dendreon finally brought the drug to market, the FDA approved rival prostate cancer drug Zytiga, developed by Johnson & Johnson (JNJ). Sales of Provenge in 2011 were only $213 million, far short of the $400 million Dendreon had projected.
Amid Dendreon’s restructuring plans, the company also announced its 2012 second-quarter earnings, which, despite being up 66% from the comparable quarter a year ago, missed analysts’ estimates. The combination of the news sent Dendreon shares to a 52-week low of $4.37 a share. The company has lost 88% of its market value since April 2010, when it first gained regulatory approval for Provenge.
Despite the bad news, Dendreon’s CEO John Johnson believes that the restructuring will set a new course for Dendreon and Provenge. In an earnings call, Johnson blamed turnover among sales representatives as one of the reasons for the weaker-than-estimated sales of Provenge, and also reiterated his confidence in the long-term prospects of Provenge.